Dentist Cindy Wang inspects a dental chair that will be for sale as part of the Great California Garage Sale, in Sacramento, Calif. The state is trying to clear clutter and raise hundreds of thousands of dollars from the two-day giant yard sale being held at a state warehouse Aug. 28-29.

Sacramento, Calif. — James Statham was the last man in a six-block line of bargain-hungry Californians waiting to pick through piles of keyboards, cast-off cameras, and computers, or to grab any bargain they could find at the "Great California Garage Sale."

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s two-day tag sale is a bid to add about $1 million to the coffers of this cash-starved state, which faces a projected $26 billion budget deficit.

While the sale is a testament to the state’s financial woes, it also illustrates just how much belt-tightening is going on across California as the economy continues to dip and unemployment rates hit a historic high of 11.9 percent in July.

For Mr. Statham, from Sacramento, and hundreds of other shoppers, the hours-long wait was worth it. He stood undeterred in mirrored sunglasses while gripping the hand of a restless youngster. Statham hoped to find a camera for his college-age daughter to use in a photography class.

Others wanted budget BlackBerrys or dirt-cheap love seats, coat racks, and desks, even kayaks and prison-issue shoes. Inside, the early birds found the best deals. They poked around stacks of 1960s-era mahogany desks and rows of outdated hard drives.

“I hope it’s a good deal,” says Judy Swartzendruber about the $350 she spent to buy a laptop and desktop computer. She drove 50 miles from Grass Valley, Calif., to attend the sale. While the crowds speak to California’s economic woes, she says, they also show that people “look for bargains anyway. Good economy or bad economy.”

Kay and Mickie of Sacramento stood next to a collection of wooden coat racks, trying to find one that hadn’t sold already. By 9 o’clock Friday morning, they said, most of “the good stuff” was gone.

But the dental chairs, vintage printing machines, and antique organs were still waiting for new owners. Computer and cameras went fast.

“I may have even bought some of this stuff,” says Jeremy Dailey, a procurement officer with the California Department of General Services, who volunteered to help run the sale, which ends Saturday at midnight. When he arrived at the Sacramento warehouse Friday morning, lines were already long. A few determined deal-seekers even camped out overnight.

In total, the state hopes to unload 600 vehicles and about 6,000 items. The stuff not piled in the Sacramento warehouse will be peddled on Craigslist or auctioned on eBay.

Governor Schwarzenegger arrived at the sale Friday morning to sign his autograph on some of the cars for sale and shake hands. "This is a win-win for the state and for shoppers.... Together we are eliminating waste and providing great deals in this tough economy," he said in an earlier statement.

It remains to be seen if the governor's signature boosts the price of cars on the auction block. According to the Public Policy Institute of California, his approval rating is only 28 percent, a new low for the governor. And that unfavorable sentiment was expressed as his entourage moved past shoppers. One woman said: "Why don't you get our jobs back."

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